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​Convulsed by a civilizational crisis, the great thinkers of the Renaissance set out to reconceive the nature of society. Everywhere they saw problems. Corrupt and reckless tyrants sowing discord and ruling through fear; elites who prized wealth and status over the common good; religious leaders preoccupied with self-advancement while feuding armies waged endless wars. Their solution was at once simple and radical. “Men, not walls, make a city,” as Thucydides so memorably said. They would rebuild the fabric of society by transforming the moral character of its citizens. Soulcraft, they believed, was a precondition of successful statecraft.

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A landmark reappraisal of Renaissance political thought, Virtue Politics challenges the traditional narrative that looks to the Renaissance as the seedbed of modern republicanism and sees Machiavelli as its exemplary thinker. James Hankins reveals that what most concerned the humanists was not reforming institutions so much as shaping citizens. If character mattered more than laws, it would have to be nurtured through a new program of education they called the studia humanitatis: the precursor to our embattled humanities.

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Virtue Politics is currently being translated into Chinese for Yilin Press. An Italian translation by Stefano U. Baldassari and Donatella Downey appeared in 2022 from Viella.

Virtue Politics
Soulcraft and Statecraft in Renaissance Italy

Published by Harvard University Press, 2019

Winner of the Helen and Howard Marraro Prize
A Times Literary Supplement Book of the Year
“Perhaps the greatest study ever written of Renaissance political thought.”
     —Jeffrey Collins, Times Literary Supplement
“Puts the politics back into humanism in an extraordinarily deep and far-reaching way … For generations to come, all who write about the political thought of Italian humanism will have to refer to it; its influence will be … nothing less than transformative.”
     —Noel Malcolm, American Affairs

© 2025 James Hankins

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